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Student Finance 2026/27 — How Much You'll Get and How to Apply

Student loan amounts, maintenance loan rates, repayment thresholds, and application deadlines for the 2026/27 academic year. Complete UK guide.

University costs are a major financial commitment. Here is everything you need to know about student finance for the 2026/27 academic year, including how much you will get and how repayments work.

Tuition Fee Loan 2026/27

DetailInformation
Maximum tuition fee£9,535 per year (England)
Who paysStudent Finance England pays your university directly
You pay upfrontNothing — the loan covers fees in full
RepaymentAfter graduation, once earning above the threshold

The tuition fee loan covers the full cost of your course. You do not need to find this money upfront.

Maintenance Loan 2026/27

The maintenance loan covers living costs (accommodation, food, books, travel). The amount depends on where you live and study, and your household income.

Maximum Rates (Household Income £25,000 or Below)

Living situationMaximum maintenance loan (approx.)
Living at home£8,500
Living away from home, outside London£10,600
Living away from home, in London£13,800
Studying abroad (year abroad)£12,200

How Household Income Affects Your Loan

Household incomeApprox. maintenance loan (away, outside London)
£25,000 or belowFull amount (~£10,600)
£30,000~£10,000
£40,000~£8,800
£50,000~£7,500
£60,000~£5,900
£70,000+Minimum amount (~£4,800)

Everyone receives at least the minimum maintenance loan regardless of household income.

How to Apply

StepDetails
1Create an account at gov.uk/student-finance
2Complete the application (personal details, course, income)
3Parents/partners provide household income details (separate login)
4Receive confirmation of funding amount
5Maintenance loan paid in 3 instalments (start of each term)

Key Dates

DateWhat happens
Feb/March 2026Applications open for 2026/27
May/June 2026Recommended deadline for starting students
September 2026First maintenance loan payment (at start of term)
January 2027Second payment
April 2027Third payment

Repayment Plans

FeaturePlan 5 (from 2023/24 starters)Plan 2 (2012–2023 starters)Plan 1 (pre-2012 starters)
Repayment threshold£25,000/year£27,295/year£24,990/year
Repayment rate9% of earnings above threshold9% of earnings above threshold9% of earnings above threshold
Interest rateRPI only (no extra interest)RPI + up to 3% (based on income)Lower of RPI or Bank of England + 1%
Written off after40 years30 years25 years (or age 65)
Collected viaPayroll (PAYE) or Self AssessmentPayroll or Self AssessmentPayroll or Self Assessment

Monthly Repayment Examples (Plan 5)

Annual salaryMonthly salaryAmount above thresholdMonthly repayment
£25,000£2,083£0£0
£28,000£2,333£250£22.50
£30,000£2,500£417£37.50
£35,000£2,917£833£75.00
£40,000£3,333£1,250£112.50
£50,000£4,167£2,083£187.50

Repayments are automatic. You do not need to set up payments.

Total Debt on Graduation

DurationTuition feesMaintenance (away, outside London, max)Total debt
3-year degree£28,605£31,800~£60,000
4-year degree (with placement/year abroad)£38,140£42,400~£80,000

Most graduates will never repay the full amount — the debt is written off after 40 years.

Extra Financial Support

Grants and Bursaries (Do Not Need to Be Repaid)

SupportWho it’s forAmount
Disabled Students’ Allowance (DSA)Students with a disability, learning difficulty, or health conditionUp to £27,404/year
NHS bursaryNursing, midwifery, and allied health students£5,000/year minimum
University bursariesVaries by institution — usually based on household income£500–£3,000+
Scholarship schemesAcademic merit, subject-specific, or widening participationVaries widely
Care leavers’ bursaryStudents who were in local authority careUp to £2,000 (from university)
Childcare GrantStudent parentsUp to ~£190/week (1 child) or ~£326/week (2+ children)
Parents’ Learning AllowanceStudent parentsUp to ~£1,950/year
Adult Dependants’ GrantStudents with a dependent adultUp to ~£3,400/year

Hardship Funds

Most universities have a hardship fund for students in financial difficulty. Apply through your university’s student services.

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland

Student finance varies by where you live (domicile), not where you study.

CountryTuition fees (at local universities)MaintenanceAdministered by
EnglandUp to £9,535/yearLoan (income-assessed)Student Finance England
ScotlandFree (for Scottish students at Scottish unis)Loan + bursarySAAS
WalesUp to £9,000/year (but fee grant available)Loan + grant (Welsh Govt Learning Grant)Student Finance Wales
Northern IrelandUp to £4,710/year (at NI universities)Loan + grantStudent Finance NI

Scottish students studying in Scotland pay no tuition fees. Welsh students receive a non-repayable maintenance grant alongside their loan.

Budgeting at University

Typical Monthly Costs (Outside London)

ExpenseMonthly cost
Accommodation (halls or private rent)£400–£700
Food and groceries£150–£250
Bills (if not included in rent)£50–£100
Transport£30–£80
Course materials£20–£50
Social and entertainment£50–£150
Phone£15–£30
Total£715–£1,360

The maximum maintenance loan (outside London) works out to roughly £880/month. Students from higher-income families with a reduced loan may need part-time work or family support to cover costs.

Related guides:

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Student finance